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Obtaining New Insights for Biodiversity Conservation from Broad-Scale Citizen Science Data
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  • Published: 13 November 2009

Obtaining New Insights for Biodiversity Conservation from Broad-Scale Citizen Science Data

  • Steve Kelling1,
  • Daniel Fink1,
  • Wesley Hochachka1,
  • Marshall Iliff1,
  • Brian Sullivan1,
  • Christopher Wood1,
  • Arthur Munson2 &
  • …
  • Mirek Riedewald3 

Nature Precedings (2009)Cite this article

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Abstract

Increasing public engagement in volunteer science1, either through data collection2 or processing3, is both raising public awareness of science and gathering useful information for scientists. While the payoffs of citizen science4 are potentially large, achieving them requires new approaches to data management and analysis that can only result from strong cross-disciplinary collaborations. This is especially true in ecology and conservation biology, where historically the understanding of species’ responses to environmental change has been constrained by the limited spatial5 or temporal scale6 of available data. Here we describe collaborative research in ecology, computer science, and statistics to generate essential information for conservation management of North American birds: accurate dynamic bird distributions models based on habitat associations across much of North America. Unique is our ability to describe the broad-scale dynamics of seasonal bird distributions and the associated seasonal patterns of habitat use. Our source of bird distribution data is eBird7, an online bird checklist program that currently gathers more than 74,000 checklists monthly from a large network of contributors. Our results were made possible through a data intensive scientific workflow8 that includes analytical methods merged from the fields of machine learning and statistics. We believe that this novel approach of data collection, synthesis, analysis, and visualization will serve as a hallmark for future research initiatives, with broad applicability across many scientific domains.

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Authors and Affiliations

  1. Cornell Lab of Ornithology https://www.nature.com/nature

    Steve Kelling, Daniel Fink, Wesley Hochachka, Marshall Iliff, Brian Sullivan & Christopher Wood

  2. Department of Computer Science Cornell University https://www.nature.com/nature

    Arthur Munson

  3. College of Computer and Information Science, Northeastern University https://www.nature.com/nature

    Mirek Riedewald

Authors
  1. Steve Kelling
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  2. Daniel Fink
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  3. Wesley Hochachka
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  4. Marshall Iliff
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  5. Brian Sullivan
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  6. Christopher Wood
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  7. Arthur Munson
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  8. Mirek Riedewald
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Corresponding author

Correspondence to Steve Kelling.

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Cite this article

Kelling, S., Fink, D., Hochachka, W. et al. Obtaining New Insights for Biodiversity Conservation from Broad-Scale Citizen Science Data . Nat Prec (2009). https://doi.org/10.1038/npre.2009.3967.1

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  • Received: 10 November 2009

  • Accepted: 13 November 2009

  • Published: 13 November 2009

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/npre.2009.3967.1

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Keywords

  • bird populations
  • biodiversity conservation
  • citizen science
  • modeling
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